Mogo Moringa Recalls 2 Capsule Lots Over Salmonella Outbreak Link
Updated
Updated · CDC · May 27
Mogo Moringa Recalls 2 Capsule Lots Over Salmonella Outbreak Link
4 articles · Updated · CDC · May 27
May 25 recall covers two lots of Pure Moringa Oleifera Capsules—15525AA expiring 6/2027 and 00926AA expiring 1/2028—sold online in white plastic bottles with green labels.
The action follows a link to Salmonella outbreaks tied to moringa products, prompting consumers to stop using the capsules, discard or return them, and wash any surfaces they touched.
Businesses were told not to sell or serve the recalled capsules and to sanitize contact surfaces to limit further contamination.
Salmonella symptoms can begin 6 hours to 6 days after exposure and usually include diarrhea, fever and stomach cramps; severe cases are more likely in children under 5, adults 65 and older, and immunocompromised people.
With recalls exposing weak FDA oversight, are consumers unknowingly gambling their health every time they buy a dietary supplement?
If the company’s tests found no Salmonella, why is this “miracle” supplement linked to a multistate outbreak?